Ozbek and the team watched as a mid-fifties man exited what looked like a bookstore and bumped into the American and his female counterpart. The man then walked toward the café while the American and his companion walked in the opposite direction. Suddenly, the American seemed to notice something out of view. He then turned and ran after the man who had left the bookstore. He caught him right before the café and knocked him to the ground, covering him with his own body, just seconds before the car bomb exploded.
A hush fell over the conference room.
Ozbek was the first to break the silence. “What made the American run after the man from the bookstore?”
“No idea,” replied Rasmussen. “It looks like he might have seen something-”
“Or someone,” interjected Whitcomb.
“But whatever, or whoever it was, it wasn’t captured by any of the cameras. They did, though, capture this,” said Rasmussen as he rewound the video feed to a much earlier point on its time code.
The team watched as a thin man in a white three-piece suit came up the sidewalk and looked up and down the street before entering the bookstore.
“René Bertrand,” said Ozbek. “So he and the American were at both the bombing and the shooting. What about Dodd?”
“If he was there, he was very careful not to get recorded by any of the cameras.”
Ozbek took a sip of his coffee as this new information played in his head. “What do we know about the American?” he asked. “He seems to have had foreknowledge of the bombing. But why chase the man from the bookstore down and risk exposure like that?”
“We’re doing a facial recognition on him right now,” said Whitcomb as she worked her own laptop.
“The American’s female counterpart and the man coming out of the bookstore match the description of the duo the American was seen speaking with in English at the Grand Palais right before the shooting,” said Rasmussen.
“If they were at the Grand Palais, the French should have them on video, shouldn’t they?” asked Ozbek.
“They probably do, but they’ve got a lot of footage to comb through. It’s going to take some time to find it.”
“I want the faces of Ms. American and Mr. Bookstore run through the databases as well.”
Rasmussen nodded. “Already on it.”
“We need every scrap of information we can get,” said Ozbek. “I want to know everything about these people. Who are they? Where are they from? Where have they been? Where are they now, and how the hell are they connected to Matthew Dodd? Also, I want to know what, if any, connection they have with Marwan Khalifa. That’s it. Let’s get to work.”
Ozbek tossed his empty cup into the trash and was halfway to the door when Stephanie Whitcomb suddenly said, “I’ve got a hit.”
Team members that had been filing out of the conference room turned and quickly came back in.
“On whom?” asked Ozbek.
“Our American,” said Whitcomb. “His name is Scot Harvath. Scot is spelled with one
“How
“This guy’s a black. There’s nothing else. No tax returns, nothing. I think it’s been scrubbed,” replied Whitcomb.
“Isn’t that interesting?” replied Ozbek.
“Wait’ll you see this,” stated Rasmussen who had abandoned his subjects and had begun a search on Harvath through the CIA’s proprietary database.
Tilting his head toward the monitor, he said, “Check it out.”
Ozbek and the others watched as Harvath’s passport photo materialized and then next to it, a more recent picture from what appeared to be a closed-circuit security camera.
There was something familiar about the background. “Where was that taken?” asked Ozbek.
Rasmussen looked at his CIA colleagues and then after double-checking his information replied, “Downstairs.”
CHAPTER 33
A
s if three cab drivers refusing to take him there weren’t warnings enough, one look at Clichy-sous-Bois convinced Harvath that he’d made the right choice in leaving Tracy and Nichols back at the barge.Not that he’d had much choice in the matter. Tracy’s headache had left her immobile, and that meant the professor was the only one who could keep an eye on René Bertrand. Nevertheless, having them along in such a rough neighborhood would have been more of a hindrance than a help.
Clichy-sous-Bois was a dilapidated hellhole of poverty-stricken French housing projects that didn’t even have its own Metro or RER train stop. Graffiti covered every surface and groups of tough young thugs wearing the latest gangster street wear sprouted like weeds from every corner. If it wasn’t for the language difference, this could have been any ghetto back home from Compton to Queens. It was someplace Harvath definitely didn’t belong.